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You’re now allowed to bag walleyes on Mille Lacs. But can you catch them?

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ISLE, MINN. – Two weeks after the state Department of Natural Resources loosened walleye regulations on Mille Lacs Lake to establish a welcomed two-fish bag limit, anglers are struggling to take advantage.

The trick is this: When the bag limit was zero, the fishing was pretty good. Now that it’s legal to catch and keep two of the fish, the prized table fare is proving difficult to hook.

“Catch rates haven’t been really high and that seems like it will continue,’’ said Brian Nerbonne, DNR regional fisheries manager in St. Paul.

Ben Glowacki, owner of Glowacki’s Resort on the west side of Mille Lacs, doesn’t disagree. But he’s hoping the fishing improves once the lake cools down and the walleyes relocate to their fall haunts. “Lately, the bite has been kind of tough,’’ he said.

The go-figure situation is a byproduct of the DNR’s ongoing struggle to establish walleye fishing regulations every spring that will keep Minnesota within its annual Mille Lacs harvest quota, as jointly set by the state and eight Ojibwe bands that maintain fishing rights. To prevent a possible overage this year, the DNR mandated that all walleyes caught between opening day and Aug. 16 be immediately released.

The annual balancing act is deemed necessary by biologists from both state and tribes to sustain the lake’s walleye population in the face of a decline.

As time went by this summer, the early-season regulation proved to be overly conservative. In late July, about 75% of the state’s quota was unused. The DNR planned all along to allow Mille Lacs anglers to keep one walleye beginning Aug. 16. But the agency loosened that rule to allow a two-fish bag limit with an angler-friendly harvest slot range of 18-20 inches.

Todd Ritter, who owns Highway 65 Bait Shop, said he was hoping for a bigger bump in business when the DNR expanded the catch-and-keep opportunity. But he and other business operators around the 207-square-mile lake said that while the change has lifted economic activity, it’s not the gold rush that some were hoping for.



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More Minnesota nonprofits are facing financial distress

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Nonprofits — from small food shelves and theaters to massive health care organizations — make up about 14% of Minnesota’s workforce, according to state data. They employ about 370,000 workers, down from a record 391,000 employees in 2019.

Many of those organizations fill gaps in government services, whether it’s mental health help or food assistance, and are part of building the civic fabric of the state, Aanestad said.

“There’s something bigger at stake,” she said. “It impacts all of us.”

Propel Nonprofits in Minneapolis, which helps nonprofits with finances and loans, has seen an uptick in requests for working capital loans to help sustain operating expenses, CEO Henry Jiménez said. It’s essential state government, foundations and donors step up their support of nonprofits, he added.

“Everybody says Minnesota is the Land of 10,000 Lakes — and also 10,000 or so nonprofits,” Jiménez added. “This is what makes Minnesota a beautiful place to live. We should continue to invest in the nonprofit sector.”

In St. Paul, Neighborhood House is serving a record number of people this year at its free food markets and other programs. Food costs and other expenses continue to rise while the number of donations and volunteers lag, CEO Janet Gracia said. The organization will stave off layoffs or program cuts by dipping into its reserves.



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Wagon rolls over at Wisconsin apple orchard injuring about 25 children and adults

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LAFAYETTE, Wis. — About 25 children and adults were injured Wednesday when a wagon carrying them overturned at a western Wisconsin apple orchard.

The children, parents and chaperones were on a field trip to the orchard in Lafayette when one of two wagons being pulled by a tractor turned sideways and rolled over, Chippewa County Sheriff Travis Hakes told reporters. Hakes said the tractor was traveling at a low speed when the wagon rolled over while going downhill.

Three people suffered critical injuries, while injuries to five others were considered serious. Authorities didn’t say how many of the injured were children.

The elementary school-age children attend a school in Eau Claire. Lafayette is northeast of Eau Claire.



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U of M inaugurates new president Rebecca Cunningham with ceremony, protest

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After about five minutes and several warnings that students participating in the protest would be suspended,, the protesters exited Northrop and Cunningham continued her speech. They later gathered outside on the mall afterwards to shout, “Cunningham, you will see, Palestine will be free.”

Cunningham recounted the story of Norman Borlaug, the U alumnus and agronomist whose research in wheat saved millions from starvation, and said she would prioritize keeping a college education affordable for students.

Cunningham actually took over presidential duties on July 1, replacing Interim President Jeff Ettinger. She oversees a budget of more than $4 billion to run the university’s five campuses, which enrolled more than 68,000 students and employed 27,000 people during the last academic year.

She was chosen for the job last winter over two other candidates: Laura Bloomberg, president of Cleveland State University and former dean of the U’s Humphrey School of Public Affairs, and James Holloway, provost and executive vice president for academic affairs at the University of New Mexico. She is the U’s second woman president, following Joan Gabel who held the office from 2019 to 2023.

Cunningham will be paid more than $1 million per year — about $975,000 in base pay and an additional $120,000 in retirement contributions. The compensation puts her in the top quarter of Big Ten university presidents.



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